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    May 30

    忍不住去考察了一下AMC的IMAX

    虽然最近很忙,还是去考察了一下AMC Rosedale新装的IMAX,博物馆之夜2,价格比平常的贵4块,就是说平时9块,周末13块。进去看了这个IMAX果然够烂够山寨啊,虽然我很有心理准备了但是还是没想到居然有这么烂。跟原来这个厅的普通屏幕大小几乎没区别,比Marcus Oakdale的那个Ultra-Screen和Burnsville那个Super-Screen都小很多。网上有些人说这个不是主要的,也许吧,但是分辨率也太差了,我甚至觉得有些重影,虽然边缘是没有光晕的,但是看人脸就看的出来轮廓里面的颜色不均匀,看着很假,有印象派绘画的感觉。座位也没看出跟原来有什么区别,去掉了最前面几排?也许吧,反正我从来不坐最前面几排。座位的角度没有变化,还是一般的stadium seating的倾斜角度, 坐在横向走廊后边第一排对屏幕的视角跟以前一模一样。画面颜色比一般的格式稍微鲜艳一些,但是这个区别就相当于我在家看电视把显示从theater view调成game view是一样的。总而言之,就是把原来一样的效果(其实我真的觉得不如原来的)直接改了个名字并且涨了价。不明白怎么还会有人会说重要的不是屏幕大小,而是immersive的experience。 这个分辨率有个P的immersive experience。 村里来的连好一点的DLP屏幕都没见过的可能会这么觉得,业内人士这么说不就是睁着眼说瞎话么。 还有人说本来不同IMAX影院的屏幕大小就是有区别的,拜托知道啥叫量变到一定程度就质变么。看来美国网上的5毛党还是很多的。而且IMAX的CEO居然无耻到说不能标出屏幕大小是因为新的IMAX theater去掉了前面几排座位所以屏幕显得比实际的大。这个么,以前老的IMAX本来就没有前面几排座位的,而且座位基本上接近垂直,他是想说现在这种去掉前面几排座位就比以前接近垂直的座位还好么。人怎么能这么无耻+无视逻辑啊。超级讨厌那个IMAX CEO. 之前他举的那个宝马的例子不就是把消费者当傻子么。7系列也是宝马,3系列也是宝马,没错。可是人家宝马标明了3系列和7系列阿。宝马这个商标相当于IMAX这个商标,你对应人家的系列呢?哪里去了?你标出屏幕尺寸不是刚好才对应人家的不同系列么。这种话也亏他好意思跟媒体讲哦。坚决抵制digital IMAX这个山寨货。希望AMC Rosedale早点把这个破厅关掉,换上Sony的4K projector, 真的比这个IMAX强多了。看完博物馆之夜,我又去另外一边一个同样大小的屏幕(AMC Rosedale有两个最大的屏幕,以前没有IMAX的时候新片都是用这两个)看了Drag me to hell, 感觉真的比那个所谓的IMAX强多了,画面真实很多,而且音响效果实际上也很好啊,而且这个根本不多收一分钱,只要新片上映的时候去看就好了。以后要看便宜一些的大屏幕还是要去Oakdale, 7块钱就能看Twin Cities仅次于动物园的大屏幕,而且几乎每周最火的电影都可以放,不局限于IMAX那几部电影,分辨率跟AMC这个伪IMAX比就是天上地下啊。要看真正的IMAX还是要去动物园(不过我估计动物园这个命不久矣了, 呵呵,还好我还在这儿也就呆一年了)。其实St. Michael那个电影院短命的IMAX效果最好了,可惜Twin Cities撑不起这个市场,那个厅就放了一部The Dark Knight就死翘翘了,呵呵。
     
    写了这么多,最重要的还是要警告大家,看变形金刚2的时候,一定不要被IMAX没有区分的网站欺骗,去AMC看这个伪IMAX啊。100%看不出什么效果的,放心好了。去那里只会贡献伪IMAX票房让IMAX继续胡扯这个跟以前的没区别。现在去这些地方看Star Trek和博物馆的人我相信90%都是被坑蒙拐骗的消费者。IMAX现在就忙不迭地说大家纷纷表示影响不大了,他也不想想人家没见过它这个新的如何当然要像我这样先考察一下咯,过一段时间看看他还能不能这么说吧。
     
    另外,Drag me to hell真是好片啊,又吓人又搞笑。整部电影充满了能让你先吓得惊叫一声然后把下巴笑掉下来的镜头,很久没看过这么好看的鬼片了,强烈推荐。
     
    Dragmetohell 
    May 14

    原来世界真的是可以倒退的

    从小到大我都觉得社会总是进步的,现在才第一次感受到原来有些东西也不是越来越先进的。本来看到AMC网页上把Rosedale加到将要新添的IMAX影院里面挺开心的,以为很快可以在很近的地方看IMAX了,后来网上一搜才发现原来AMC从去年开始加的IMAX厅都是山寨货。而且看IMAX的意思,以后就专攻山寨了,有放弃追求最好效果的打算了。去年的The Dark Knight才开始有人用IMAX摄影机拍大片,现在IMAX自己先放弃了,呵呵,这个世界上的事情还是很ironic的。今年不看变形金刚的话,可能以后再也看不到IMAX摄影机拍的大片了。

    http://www.lfexaminer.com/20081016.htm

    Is IMAX the next "New Coke"?

    An editorial by James Hyder, Editor/Publisher
    In April 1985, the CEO of Coca Cola held a press conference in New York City to announce that the company was changing the century-old formulation of its famous soft drink. The new version was officially given the “Coca Cola” name, and production of the original formula was halted that week.
    The new soda, which became widely (but unofficially) known as “New Coke,” had received favorable reactions in taste tests and focus groups. But ultimately, millions of customers, angered that the company would suddenly change the product it had labeled “The Real Thing,” pressured it to reintroduce the original flavor. The company hurriedly returned it to store shelves less than three months later, re-branded as “Coke Classic.” Coke executives were widely ridiculed for underestimating their customers’ devotion to the brand and for their perceived highhandedness in tinkering with a classic.
    In September 2008, Richard Gelfond, co-CEO of Imax Corporation, told members of the Giant Screen Cinema Association that “we don’t think of [IMAX] as the giant screen.” Rather, he said, “it is the best immersive experience on the planet.”
    The company takes this position because it has chosen not to differentiate its new digital projection system in any way from the 15/70 film systems it has been installing in giant-screen theaters since 1970. This despite the fact that, according to Imax VP Larry O’Reilly, its two major digital partners, AMC Entertainment and Regal Entertainment Group, both originally wanted to brand the new screens as “IMAX Digital.” And based on the reaction Gelfond’s announcement received in New York (and on many conversations I’ve had since) many, if not most, institutional IMAX operators would prefer this as well. In short, virtually all of Imax’s customers and partners would like to see a distinct new identity for the digital system.
    But Gelfond flatly rejected this possibility, offering an absurdly flawed analogy with BMW automobiles. He said that the German carmaker offers the 7-series line of larger, more powerful, luxury models as well as the smaller, entry-level 3-series cars. “People don’t say ‘The 3 isn’t a real BMW because it’s smaller.’”
    Of course, this ignores the fact that the model numbers, to say nothing of the prices, clearly distinguish BMW’s different product lines in consumers’ minds, while maintaining the unity of the brand. No car buyer believes he has bought a $125,000 760Li only to receive a $30,000 328i.
    Yet this is the position in which Imax is now putting customers who pay $15 to see Eagle Eye: The IMAX Experience at New York City’s new AMC Empire 25 IMAX digital theater, with its 28x58-foot (8.5x18 meter) screen. They see the IMAX name on the theater and have no idea until after their ticket has been torn and they walk into the auditorium that that screen is about the same size as the one in the adjacent 35mm auditorium, and less than a quarter the size of the one in the AMC Lincoln Square IMAX 15/70 theater, 26 blocks away. The screen in the older film theater is 76x98 feet (23x30 meters). Here’s a graphic representation of the difference: 

    Gelfond explained that the company feared an “IMAX Digital” brand might cast the older film-based theaters as “second-class citizens” in the public’s mind, since “digital” generally has connotations of “newer,” and “cooler.”
    Although this apparent concern for museums and other “old school” operators is touching, it seems far more likely that the company was worried that ticket buyers who noticed the difference between the average 4,800 square-foot (450 square-meter) 15/70 film screen and a digital one 1,250 square feet (120 square-meters) in area wouldn’t return to the smaller if they could see the same movie on the larger.
    In other words, “IMAX Digital” might become the next “New Coke.” Widespread public preference for the “classic” experience would harm Imax’s return on the tens of millions of dollars it is investing in the 170+ joint venture deals it has signed.
    The “wow” factor
    Gelfond claimed that the company only puts IMAX digital systems into multiplex auditoriums that meet certain criteria. He jokingly said, “It’s a very scientific test. It’s called the ‘wow’ factor. So if you don’t go in and go ‘wow,’ we won’t do it.”
    In more than 24 years in the business, I have personally been in 132 giant-screen theaters of all brands, formats, and sizes, including four MPX (15/70 film) theaters and five IMAX digital screens. I may be jaded, but none of those nine coaxed even a faint “wow” from my lips, because all were merely ordinary multiplex houses that had been modified slightly. The seating rake was unchanged and nowhere near the 20–25-degree angle that is standard in purpose-built IMAX theaters. The room’s depth, from the screen to the last row, may have been reduced slightly by moving the screen forward and removing a few rows of seats. But most were still significantly deeper than the width of the screen, thus providing the audience a narrower (i.e., less immersive) average field of view.
    But most importantly, of course, the screens were only a fraction of the size of a “real” IMAX theater screen. And all were shorter, 1.9-aspect-ratio screens, not the tall 1.44 screens of classic IMAX theaters. And let’s face it, the biggest aspect of the “wow” factor is height. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that even a very wide screen is not nearly as impressive as a one that towers six or eight stories high.
    The screen door effect
    Using two high-powered digital projectors, the IMAX digital system projects an image that is bright, with good contrast and slightly better resolution than other digital projectors. But every IMAX digital theater I’ve been in has also had a noticeable “screen door effect,” that is, a visible dark grid pattern separating the pixels. It is particularly noticeable in lighter image areas, and is less visible the farther you are from the screen. But even with my 53-year-old eyes, I was able to see it from the front half of most of the five theaters I’ve been in. If you move back to eliminate the pattern, your field of view becomes narrower, and hence no different than an ordinary movie theater.
    At the New York demonstration, I was seated in the fourth row next to a long-time IMAX theater manager. I had not said anything to him about my perceptions of the IMAX digital theaters I had already seen. But the moment the first image came up on the screen — it was the MPAA rating card for the first trailer — I heard a gasp as he noticed the screen door pattern that made the card’s white-on-green text look “jaggy.” He later confirmed being stunned at how obvious and distracting the pattern was.
    Although many people I spoke with after the demo shared this reaction, to my surprise not everyone found the pattern as noticeable or distracting as I had. Some didn’t see it, others did, but didn’t mind it as much.
    But for me it is clearly the biggest reason to say, “This is not IMAX.” I grant that the image is bright and contrasty, and has good color. And it only took hearing a shuttle launch in Space Station 3D to know that the new sound system is fully up to IMAX standards. I might even be willing to compromise on the aspect ratio.
    But IMAX — real IMAX — presents reality. Not reality as seen through a screen door.
    And even though it beats conventional 2K for brightness and contrast, IMAX digital is not, in my opinion, better than Sony’s 4K SXRD system. At ShoWest in Las Vegas last spring, I saw 21 in 4K on a screen that was at least 60 feet wide, maybe bigger. I intentionally took a seat less than one screen-height from the screen, right next to David and Patricia Keighley, as it happened. I found the Sony’s image to be bright, contrasty, and sharp, and as good or better than film would have been at that size. And most importantly, I couldn’t see any pixels or patterns.
    Conclusions
    Let me make one thing clear: I am not opposed to digital projection in principle, or to the IMAX digital system in particular. I think the change to digital projection in the giant-screen world is inevitable. And I fully admit that the IMAX digital system is superior, in certain respects, to some other digital systems.
    But I object when anyone claims that two patently different things are the same. Where I come from that's known as “lying.” And call me naïve, but I don’t believe that any company whose business plan is based on deceiving its customers can succeed with that strategy for very long.
    Imax Corporation, whose very name means “image maximum,” has spent four decades persuading the public that that name is synonymous with “big,” with giant screens, with an experience that is completely unlike that of conventional multiplex cinema.
    If, for perfectly understandable business reasons, Imax now has to move into those smaller screens, let it distinguish this new product from the other screens in that theater, as a “premium multiplex experience,” as Sydney’s Mark Bretherton has suggested.
    But expecting the ticket-buying public to believe that that experience is identical to one on a screen three or four times larger is insulting. People who have been to a true giant-screen theater will realize they have been misled, and will be disappointed, if not angry. Those who haven’t will wonder what the big deal about IMAX is, and will assume that any real giant-screen theater they come across in the future has nothing better to offer and perhaps never will have the real IMAX Experience.
    By not distinguishing between two different products, Imax has degraded its brand with all customers. And far from protecting the film-based theaters from second-class status, it has lowered the public’s perception of all IMAX theaters. This has even led some theaters in the institutional segment to consider dropping the IMAX brand from their marketing and perhaps even their signage. When your oldest customers want to disassociate themselves from your brand, something is wrong.
    The tragic irony is that, forty years after Imax Corp. started trying to persuade Hollywood to shoot with IMAX cameras, the success of Chris Nolan’s The Dark Knight, the first to do so, has finally encouraged several other directors to follow suit. Three or four coming films may incorporate 15/70 footage. And yet, by the time these movies open, the majority of IMAX theaters may be digital screens with 1.9 aspect ratios that make the dramatic transitions in resolution and image size all but invisible. What a waste!
    The lesson from Coca Cola is clear: Although the “New Coke” incident was initially perceived as embarrassing to management, the company’s reputation was ultimately enhanced by its prompt response to customer concerns. With two distinct products, “Coke Classic” and “New Coke,” sales rocketed and the company regained the top market position it had lost to Pepsi years earlier. It has remained number one ever since.